By Dr Dalaly Peter Kafumu
Summary
· By 1987 the DTT instead of undertaking exploration and mine development, it heavily engaged in dubious and opaque gold buying activities from small scale miners in Artisanal and Small Scale Mining (ASM) areas
Last week we saw the efforts of the
government to engage foreign companies to bring in the country expertise and
funding to assist Tanzania in building capacity to enable the nations
profitably exploit its mineral resources.
This week we continue with the story
of engagement of foreign companies and institutions to help Tanzania stand on
its feet in exploiting its mineral resources.
Between 1980 and 1985 the UNDP
funded exploration projects conducted large scale geological and geochemical
reconnaissance surveys throughout the country.
These projects generated very
important geological data-sets that became the guiding tool to most gold
mineral exploration projects in the Lake Victoria gold fields and it later
allowed some of world-class gold mines like the Bulyanhulu, Buzwagi, Tulawaka,Resolute
and Geita mines to be established in Tanzania in the late 1990s to early 2000s.
Another notable foreign assisted
project that was undertaken between 1984 and 1988 was the Dar Tardine Al Ummah
(DTU) company based in Bahamas through the Dar Tadine (T) Ltd (DTT).
It entered into an agreement with
the government to organise and fund gold exploration, mine development and gold
trading in the Lake Victoria Goldfields areas that include Geita and Rwamgasa
in Geita District, Musoma and Mara areas in Musoma and Tarime Districts and
Iramba Sekenke areas in Iramba District.
Indeed the Dar Tadine Al Umma
Limited (DTU) Company through the Dar Tardine (T) Limited (DTT) entered into an
agreement with the government to explore, mine and trade gold in Tanzania to ensure
the economy of the country grows to benefit the nation and its people.
By 1987 the DTT instead of
undertaking exploration and mine development, it heavily engaged in dubious and
opaque gold buying activities from small scale miners in Artisanal and Small
Scale Mining (ASM) areas.
The gold buying activities were
shrouded in exploitative secrecy, as the gold prices and the revenue obtained
thereafter were all under-declared and in many instances the gold was illegally
exported.
In this respect the DTT did not
implement the most important requirement of the agreement of organising and
funding gold exploration, mine development in Tanzania as per the agreement and
this triggered the government to take legal actions against the company.
The Government of Tanzania then
opened an arbitration case at the International Arbitration Chamber in Paris to
terminate the agreements between the DTT and won the petition and the
agreements were terminated.
At the same time as the agreements
was terminated the Parliament of United Republic of Tanzania in 1988 launched a
special inquiry to investigate what transpired during the implementation of the
agreement between the government and the DTT.
Parliament discovered that the
agreement between the DTU/DTT and the government of Tanzania became linked to a
wider international financial conspiracy network that finally in the 1990’s
ended up into a series of legal litigations in Swiss Courts and around the
world.
The Parliamentary Committee Report
recommended among other things that the government ought to be always on alert,
careful and diligent in dealing with foreign companies in national mineral
resource exploitation and management.
These series of failed undertakings
once again pushed the Second Phase Government leadership that entered its
second segment of leadership (1990 – 1995) to seek knowledge and understanding
of the dynamics of the mining industry and how it works in globalised world.
Apart from entering into several
mine development agreements for mineral exploration including the development
of the Bulyanhulu Gold Mine that was entered in 1992 the government sought the
assistance of the World Bank for institutional capacity building and the
drawing of policy, legal and fiscal frameworks.
Next week we will dichotomise further
these new World Bank assisted Mining Reforms of the 1990s that aimed at
assisting the country to attract more foreign direct investments (FDI) and
helping the mining industry in having a meaningful contribution into the
economy towards economic freedom.
No comments:
Post a Comment